A: A landowner owes a measured duty in both common law nuisance and negligence to take reasonable steps to prevent natural occurrences, such as floods, on its land from causing damage to neighbouring properties. The landowner’s liability is subject to the concepts of reasonableness between neighbours and reasonable foreseeability. It has also been suggested that the resources and abilities of both the claimant and the defendant are relevant. The measured duty applies to removing or reducing them for a neighbouring landowner or occupier.
Where the defendant is a public authority with substantial resources, the court must take into account the competing demands on those resources and the public purposes for which they are held. It may not be fair, just or reasonable to require a public authority to expend those resources on infrastructure works to protect a few individuals against a modest risk of property damage.
The upstream riparian owner is:
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